Showing posts with label mammy diaries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mammy diaries. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

The Mammy Diaries review

Mammy Diaries, by Maria Moulton, is finally out!


Maria sweetly sent me a review copy, and here's what I think.

It’s great to see The Mammy Diaries finally out on the shelf. I remember years ago on Rollercoaster, seeing Maria’s questions pop up. I was excited to get my hands on it and see what it was like after that long gestation :)


To a certain extent, I am not this book’s target audience, so I’m not so sure how useful a review by me is. Two reasons – the first is that I wanted a homebirth from the word go, and I ate up every book on the subject I could, politics, physiology of birth, all of it. From that perspective, some of the early comments in the book come from a different place than I did, and, as such, they weren’t voices I related to. I do know plenty of people approach pregnancy on a need-to-know basis, and they would get more from it than I. The second reason is that I was never anyone’s Mammy or Mam, and the book title totally alienates me. But I know I’m in the minority, and I hope it has the opposite effect on everyone else.

My one other complaint is that the self-published as the book is, I think it could do with a rigorous edit – a few glitches caught my eye, the exclamation marks need culling, and I found it a little hard to determine the switches between the voices of the mothers and the author.

However, aside from those criticisms, I think the book is great – it’s humorous, real and practical and gives voice to all sorts of mothers’ experiences. I said that I thought the book wasn’t for me, initially, but I changed my mind as I started getting engrossed in the birth stories, both sad and uplifting. The breast feeding section is useful and supportive and pleasantly emphatic, and I love the connection to Friends of Breastfeeding. The book includes a detailed and honest section on post natal depression, which I think is vital, really, in these days of nuclear families where women with young children can feel very isolated and alone. I think it’s a thoughtful and realistic inclusion.

I am a little sorry that the only quote that I originally provided that made it into the book is a rather dubious one about extended feeling – I feel quite the hypocrite given that I went on to feed my son for an emphatic three and a half years! Perhaps part of me still feels the way I did in the book, but that got overridden pretty fast.

I think other women and mothers are our best resource. We are lucky if we are surrounded by a circle of them, but some of us aren’t, and I think this book goes a long way to create that feeling of solidarity and understanding. The section on Bad Mammy Moments is worth the asking price alone. This would make a really fun, practical and thoughtful present for a mother-to-be, I wholeheartedly recommend it.